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With a mandate to be bold, Princeton s Dean for Research Innovation Funds spark scholarship, educational opportunities and further investments in research

With a mandate to be bold, Princeton s Dean for Research Innovation Funds spark scholarship, educational opportunities and further investments in research
princeton.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from princeton.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

With labs still closed, science professors find creative ways to teach

With labs still closed, science professors find creative ways to teach Liz Fuller-Wright, Office of Communications April 5, 2021 2:22 p.m. Princeton faculty in engineering and the natural sciences have found a multitude of creative solutions to teach lab courses through the pandemic. For example, instructors for the mechanical and aerospace engineering course “Automated Control Systems” set up systems that allowed engineering students scattered across the globe to program a mechanical arm to balance a swinging rod a very modern take on the old game of balancing a broom upright in your hand. Video by Nick Donnoli, Orangebox Pictures Princeton faculty have found a number of innovative ways to teach remotely, from mailing archival materials to virtually choreographing dances. But how can you teach science when the labs themselves are shuttered?

From lab to everyday life: Princeton accelerator fund supports promising innovations

Catherine Zandonella, Office of the Dean for Research March 5, 2021 9:21 a.m. Seven technologies that address some of society’s biggest challenges  from foolproof antibiotics to low-cost water purification  will receive support for research and development through Princeton’s Intellectual Property Accelerator Fund.  A technology for illuminating targets for new drugs against cancer and viruses is one of several selected to receive support from the Intellectual Property Accelerator Fund to help develop Princeton discoveries to the stage where they can have broader societal impact. Photo courtesy of David MacMillan laboratory, Princeton University The program gives discoveries an extra push through the development pipeline to bring technologies to the stage where they are ready for further investment, from either a startup or a larger company. 

Four Princeton faculty members awarded NEH grants

Four Princeton faculty members awarded NEH grants Jamie Saxon, Office of Communications Dec. 21, 2020 9:24 a.m. Four Princeton faculty members have received research grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH). Alison Isenberg, professor of history, received a $30,000 grant for research and writing “Uprisings: The Impact of Martin Luther King Jr.’s Assassination and the Case of Trenton, New Jersey, a book on unrest in Trenton, New Jersey, in the aftermath of the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Beth Lew-Williams, associate professor of history, received a $60,000 grant for research and writing “Race and Law in the American West, 1850–1924,” a book on Chinese immigrants and the law in the American West, 1850–1924.

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